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\ \ 00,000 BAIL IS DEMANDED FOR SHINDLER LYMAN Federal races Argues for! Big Sum and Case Is Continued. SENT BACK TO TOMBS. Relatives of Alleged Swindler said to Be Considering Insanity Plea. When J. Grant Lyman, accused of using the mails to defraud, was ar- raigned before Judge Dayton in the United States District Court this morning Assistant United States Dis- trict Attorney tSanton asked that bail for the prisoner be fixed at $100,000. ’ “This man is already under ball of $20,000 in California,” he argued, “and would be tried there for using the mails to defraud if he were within the jurisdiction of the California ,courts.”” Frank 8. O'Nedll, attorney for Ly- man, protested that $50,000 bail was the record in the Federal Court and that the amount asked was excessive. Judge Dayton remanded the prisoner to the Tombs after Ris plea of not guilty had been entered, and will hear arguments on the amount of bail to- morrow morning at 10.30 o'clock One reason the Government ts de- manding such heavy bail for Lyman te that when the post-office Inspectors went through his trunk In Florida they say the found fifteen fine saws, weighing all tother no more than a ain. With one of these saws T LESS MEAT AND TAKE SALTS Says a tablespoonful of Salts flushes Kidneys, stop- ping Backache. Meat forms Uric Acid, which excites Kidneys and Weakens Bladder. Eating meat t regularly eventually pro- duces kidney trouble in some form or other, says a’ well-known authority, be- cause the uric acid in meat excites the sia they become overworked; get uggish; clog up and cause all sorts of digas, particularly backache and mis- ery in the kidney region; rheumatic twinges, se daches, acid stomach, constipation, torpid liver, sleeplessness, bladder and urinary irritation ‘The moment your back hurts or kid- neys aren't acting right, if bladd bothers you, get about four ounces alts from any good pharmac take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before pukfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This is made from the cid of rapes and lemon juice, combined with ithia, and has been used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity; also to neu- tralize the acids in the urine so it no tong “4 irritates, thus ending bladder dis- Jed Salts cannot injure any eC; makes a delightful effervescent lithia- water drink which millions of men and women take now and then to keep the kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus if serio divt. ABOUT-300,000 BABIES DIE BEFORE ONE YEAR The Census Bureau estimates that 900,000 babies died in this country last year before the age of one year, and it ie stated that one-half of these deaths were necdless if all mothers were strong and all infants were breast-fed. Expectant mothers should increase their strength with the strength-build- ing fats in Scott's Emulsion which improves the blood, suppresses ner- vousness, aids the quality of milk eds the very life cells, ians prescribe Scott's Emul- it is doubly important duri nursing. Every druggist has it. aL ways insist on Scott's—the white food- medicine,» Always free from alcohol, Scott & Blooawfield, N, d.—Advt, 15-2 BELL-ANS, Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package provesit. 25cat all druggists. All lost oF found articles ad~ id will be Informa~ Bureau, Pulitzer Bullding A . Bark Row; World's Uptown Office, northwest nee sth Sty and. Broadwas World's Harlem Office, West 125th Brooklyn Offic ton Sty, Brook!sn, for 0 days following the printing of the ertisement, st IF KIDNEYS HURT { they soit an tron cuspidor tn two tn minute and a half. Deducing from lant that Lyman has an aversion to | thé’ fine ment behind iron bars, Federal authorities are taking no | chances o nhim. sot bepore Lyman was pnd ltn District C wis ‘eneentis it was reported in the ted to an insane asylum. When | tne man wlio t# accused of having netted $200,000 or more on toc! | this plan, he satd: If they thigk I’m crazy, let them read the book I wrote two years ago. It then developed that two years jago when a similar effort was made l escapades in Californi wrote a book entitled, in which he took the position that he was not. “I will fight any plan of that sort on the part of my relatives,” the al- leged swindler is quoted as saying. “T |am not crazy and won't offer a de- fense of that kind.” Lyman arrived here yesterday, handcuffed to Deputy Marshal W. D. Vingant of Tampa, Fla. 4 Lyman joined them at West Philadelphia and | was present when Vinzant turned his the prisoner shal MeCarthy, who placed bim in the | Tombs. A broad grin and the remark “let |them tind it if they can,” was Ly- man's only response to an inquiry as td what he had done with the $200,000 he is alleged to have cleaned up whire | doing business as John H. Putnam &| Co., No, 68 Broad Street. Detectives | have got trace of some of the money, however, which they say was put in banks in Washington, Philadelphia and uptown New York, Secret Service men are investigating Lyman’s claim that when he was ar- rested man who said he was a Federal agent searched him and took twenty-one $1,000 bills which were concealed in @ newspaper in his in- side pocket. It developed to-day the first tip on Lyman's whereabouts after he disap- peared from his office came from a woman from whom he obtained $6,000 and to whom he showed attentions seid to be far from businesslike. This woman, hearing Lyman was at the New Willard Hotel in Washington, Went there expecting to join him When she got there, detectives say, Lyman was gone Outraged because of his failure to make good his promises and realizing that her $6,000 had gone when Lyman did, the woman put the Federal went on his trail, | Lyman says the men he “trimmed” in New York were wise ones and he was delighted to take them into camp, “I gave them some good tips at that,” he remarked. “I gave them Ohio Ol and it went up from 160 to 260 in ten days. If 1 had bought the stock we all could have got rich.” In response to a suggestion that with his knowledge of the stock mar- ket he might make a fortune legitl- mately Lyman said: “I might, per- h T had $400,600 once and it was y. Then I had to have t once and I got it crooked.” has retained Frank 8. former State Boxing Com- to act as his attorney. Cards found in Lyman’s pockets, cording to detectives, seem to in- money Lyman O'Neill, missioner, dicate he was associated In business at one time with George Graham Rice, who was sent to Sing Sing sev- eral years ago for swindling. When ed if this was so, uld not nember, Lyman was asked if $14,000 in cosh Lyman said he | and $6,600 in a certified check were the amounts taken from him when he was arrested Th n papers make it al~ most double that,” he replied, “and you can take It from me they are | correct.” Lyman said the prisons in the South were so filthy he enjoyed his quarters in the Tombs last night. <a Admits Impersonating Cartoonist. for weeks been trying to locate a nysterious impersonator who used his name, was in the Jefferson Market Court to-day when Joseph Harold Coffman Welch, forty years old, of the Mills Hotel, ‘Thirty seventh Street and Seventh Avenue, appeared In response to a summons and Was fined $10 for disorderly con- duct, Welch admitted he had posed fas the cartoonist. Fined for Beating Niece. Mary Maglione of No. 213 East Hundred and Eighteenth Street, Mra One was fined $50 in Special Sessions to-day for brutal treatment of her niece ward, The and thirteen-year-old Rosa Cristo. ‘Justices were satisfied that Rosa ec d for staying at school dy instead of Koins home prompt- ly to do the house cleaning. She was eaten all over her body and bitten on the arms. The child was put In the care of the Children’s Soclety CURED HIMSELF OF THE LIQUOR HABIT A Missouri Man Aftor Drinking for Thirty-five Years Banished Hie Craving for Liquor With a Simple Home Recipe. Mr. Thos. J. D. O'Bannon, a well- known resident of Missouri, living at R. F. D. No, 8, Frederickstown, Mo., \banished his craving for liquor with | simple recipe, which he mixed at | home, Mr. O'Bannon recently made the fol- lowing statement: “Tam 51 years old and had drank for thirty-five years, My craving was so great 1 could not quit liquor. More than a year ago I had the following pe filled and began taking it, it entirely banished my craving for liquor. To 8 oz. of water add 20 of muriate of ammonia, a small box of Varlex Compound and 10 grains of pepsin, Take « teaspoonful three a day. Any druggist can mix jit for you or supply the ingredients at very little cost. This recipe can be taken of your own accord or given to e secretly in coffee, tea, milk or color or smell, harmless. 1 believe cure himself with this om Advi jand is perfectly drunkard | simple recipes ewindling schemes was asked about! ‘Am I Insane?” | prisoner over to United States Mar-| Hal Coffman, a cartoontat, who has | THE EVENING WORLD, THUNSDAY, ‘ 1916. Women Should Hold On to Their ‘Alimony; That’s the Answer by a Men,”’ Says Miss Lucille Pugh. | “Alimony is a relic of the dark a, | dict, in applying for a divorce in © to excuse one of Lyman’s financial | quisites of love's involuntary bankruptcy. ’ “Marriage should be a link, not # handcuff,” she io self-respecting feminist would accept ali- added. mony. It would Worse than t man to take car words, alimony i One CAN borrow money on them. However, what does the woman ‘about this matter? Mrs of course. So are mine, They always are. Place therefore to the opinions of Miss Lucille Pugh, one of the! youngest and most successful women |lawyers in New York, Miss Pugh has collected many thousands of dol- lars,in altmony for other women! scorns it herself, In fact, she corns even the necessary qualifica- tions for alimony, for she won't even put herself in on Cupid's civil service Met by getting married. SHE'S A SWAGGER CELIBAT THIS WOMAN LAWYER. Miss Pugh is one of those women whose celibacy is visibly voluntary. She is pretty and little and dark. She parts her hair on the side. |fiqure has a boyish swagger that She © cars the most masculine tail- ored clothes and shirts and linen col- Jars that men tailors and haberdash- | is, for between sun and sun she puts | flowers in her hair and carrics @ pea- cock feather fan. | known to sport a cloth of gold eve- | ning gown with pantalettes, “Look here,” Miss Pugh began vig- drously, “you and I and other profes- | sional women are one thing. And the untrained woman who has been a quite another thing! She's helpless and she knows it. All she bas—all she HAD most of the time—was her charm, beauty, whatever you choose to call it. And she gave it te a man. | without a cent when she bas lost her | freshness, when a new face allures him? I think not. YOU would not take alimony. To be frank, neithor should I; but these other women Jcan't afford to be so (blank) inde- pendent.” Miss Pugh's quick tongue slipped | a cog just here! She said it! you and I may have sald it at times | “Besides, don't yow think we theor- | {sts are going pretty far when we are | willing’ to surrender our privileges— | privileges the law allows us—for |rights that are sti]l up in the air? | You want to vote, So do I, Lut we | CAN'T The State of New | York | equality with men. Why, then, should | we establish financial equality, sur- render the advantages we've got for | those we want, but as yet can't have? It's too easy for men.” SHOULD WOMEN GIVE UP LAST REMAINING RIGHT? “Many of my clients these days are women trying to collect alimony. And I can tell you we have a hard time. Some of the Judges before whom I appear seem to think that a woman is lucky to be allowed to live. “A New York Judge gave one of my women clients $3 a week alimony, though her husband has three parcels of real estate in Jamaica, L. 1, and lives on the income from his property A few days ago an actress came to ine, asking me to collect alimony from her husband, ‘But you make a good Income yourself,’ I said@o her, ‘What of that? she answered. ‘I want everything that’s coming to me. Do you think I am going to let him off as easily as that?” think that's the way most women feel on the subject. They can't af- ford—or they think they can’t afford to think as you and I do. We kn that the hardest way of all of earning vote, ow to the Feminist Who Declared Alimony a «| Relic of the Dark Ages—‘ Too Easy for the | care for herself.” that she is no longer charming enough to induce a new self-respecting and feministic and enjoy all those other luxuries that some of us permit ourselves. erans of matrimony. about all those words connected with marriage, any- how—Ceremony, Matrimony, Alimony. Benedict's views are unsound, Her slim | serve® only to enhance its girlishness. | ers can turnout. In office hours, that She has even been wife and mother for twenty years is |Has he the right to turn ber out Just as} has just refused us pvlitical) Well Known Practitioner: ges,” observed Crystal Kastman Bene- hicago, but spurning the usual per- be ‘he, confession that she could not hat, I think. Tt’s her public admission ‘e of her if she does not want to be In other is a sex pension for the G, A. R. vet- What a metallic chink there is (One could almost cash them.) who actually collects alimony think! What does the lawyer who collects it for her think? jis, if that's all she can do ene HAS depreciated. She has had no training for work. She can't be turned out on the world at forty or fifty. In all this disoussion I ussume that we refer to Hd childle#s wife who seeks alimony. For, naturally, the mather of young children is incapacitated for outside work and can serve society best by taking care of her family.” “Of course,” I acquiesced, “the mother of young children should be pensioned I think, by the State, by the general endowment of mother-| hood, but until that idea prevails sho should be supported by the father of the child. It is only when a wife is childless and in good health andin the full use of her faculties that I agree with Mrs. Crystal Eastman.” “So do I—for Mrs. Eastman--for you--for me-~Miss Pugh brought one tiny Southern fist down on her big mahogany desk--I tell you if I were | married and my husband didn't be- }have himself I'd give him a good thrashing and turn him out.” I looked at the little girlish figure behind the big desk. “You could not thrash anybody!" I observed incredulously. “Oh, yes I could!" replied Lucille Pugh, militant. “But I'd rather not jtake my exercise that way. It's easier to dance or ride horseback or play polo. I've got a game knee now from a polo match I played down at Pinehurst in February. But what do Leare? My side won. ——_. - GOES TO COURT TO GET HER CAT OUT OF FLUE Blackie’s Predicament Baffles Fire, Police, Health and Tene- ment Departments. Seeking relief from imprisonment for her cut, Blackie, Miss Mabel God- frey exhausted the resources of the Fire, Health, Police and Tenement House Departments to-day and | turned as a last resort to Magistrate the | Levy in Washington Heights Court Blackie, in murderous pursuit of a | mouse, got in the flue of the house at No, 203 West One Hundred and Thir- |tieth Street through the fireplace of | Mrs. Elizabeth Brady, with whom Miss Godfrey boards, Miss Godfrey neighbors fis! all last night sent a man, | her brothers and the | for the cat in vain! The Fire Department | who let down a brick on a rope in the hope Blackle would use {t for a hoisting sling. ‘The + brick knocked the unfortunate pussy dwn two floors. The Board of Health emergency and the tenement house | inspector said if the cat were allowed to die in the hole somebody would be held to strict accountability. Miss Godfrey asked Landlord Gera- ty to let her have the chimney ripped | out. He sugegsted less drastic mea- sures, She went to court and got a) summons for ( aty, charging him with cruelty to animals. But when she returned with the document, the, chimney had ben torn out and Blackie) was out of the trenches. Also, he was dead, | ae FORMS INDEPENDENT CHURCH (Special to The Brening Word | PHILADELPHIA, March 2.—A new denomination came into being to-day When Rey. George Chalmers Richmond gathered about him a number of ad- | herents for a last meeting in the base- ment of old St. John's Protestant Epis- | copal Church, from which the fightin rector has been ousted through @ series of adver: decisions by ecclesiastical and civil courte. Vowing never again to put foot across the portals of the old | church, where most of them had wor. shipped for many year twenty-two ve and wor and their Famili ined with Dr. Richi ew St money is to get it out of a man. But] the Episcopal Diocese of BASF they don’t know it, They are afrald | Tt was decided to hold the first wervice of life. ‘They think they can’t earn a of the new church next Sunday living for themselves, Of course they COULD, But what's the use so long STOPS FALLING HAIR as they don't know it? “L understand Cryst views, vols View EROE TS iy views This Home Mad Mixture Stops | ‘or myself. e generalize 1s it not, that a married woman isn’t y entitled to any specific part of her —— husband's income, only to vayue sup-| Toa half pint of water add port--tood, lodging and clothing. Rum a ol oz.| What that amounts to depends on the | Barbo Compound. sy +.++ + A a small box| individual, on what she can get oUt | Glycerine ‘ Pash ys of him by persuasion or bullying These are all. simple ingredients THE LAW'S IGNORANCE OF |that you can buy from any druggist at | WOMAN'S VALUE. very little cost, and mix them y: “The strange hing of all,” 1 said,|self, Apply to the sealp once a day | “th that the law does not recognize |for two weeks, then once ¢ what she’s worth to her husband| week until all the mixture is used. A until she ceases to be worth ANY-|half pint should be enough to rid. tne THING to him. In other words, she | nead of dandruff and kill the dandruff has to separate from hin forfeit her] germs, It stops the hair from falling Job—in order to collect any specific pay lout and relieves itching and scalp for 1 Asa happy wife she's worth disease: Whatover ‘he chooses to give heh—@a @) “Although it is not a dye. it acts | Rafa wabioue on aeeuns upon. the hair roots and will darken colléet regularly once a Week, y a ia Ba streaked, fa ary in tenor “Damages, of course’/ Miss Pugh | fifteen days, I promotes the growth replied, “depreciat you sald a while ago, ion of Value, justas of the Bul the point aud glossy, Advi. aud makes bursh hair soft |hind the German, said {t had no apparatus to meet the! * Miss LUCILLE PUGH. Their Last Legal Right, Says Woman Lawyer beggar begun describing | turned his attention to us. around all the time, went, diving lustily AVIATORS FIGHT THRILLING BATTLE :<: 10,000 FEETIN AIR expected the to begin any moment | we got him: billet and the Fokker pilot waa nu more. “Pirst he turned over, wheels up; SHIELDS Daring Anebiiie Duel Bits eterno steers ‘Wa ae a, Waa = a When German “Fokker” | feverat turns on to and oft hin back,| "Rey Last Longer | sideways until he struck. ‘The nose Plunges to Earth. rut, | # feet of earth and mechaniclan \ > LONDON, March 2.—How a Ger- On FOP, man “Fokk fighting plane, shot down by a British airman, came tum bling from a height of 7,000 feet, was described in a letter from the British | caping Vrisoner Policen pee be ie) Seems The Fokker | iy Kingsland Avenue, Newtown plunged through the roof of a British | was taking them to the station o dugout, wounding four soldiers. broke away and lost ‘The British pilot, with an observer, | snowstorm, dodging #hots from Har revolver was starting for @ flight of recon-| No. 11% e Avent ne over the Ge was Ic An hour In noissance over the German lines and | Was le GR be lah had ascended to more than 10,000 feet. | to John Webb of No. ne Mareh 2 ‘Down we went, almost vertically,’ Wyckoff, who didn’t see us until we opened fire “Twenty rounds failed in a vital spot, to hit bin his but he quit the chase» |. gclbaimaia Friday, March srd EUR Spring Hats s of French Descent Milans, Silks and Ribbon Models $8: (6) All those naive, new shapes and fresh materials—Spring blos- soms which look as if they had just burst from Parisian band boxes, Nothing prettier, nothing more chie and becoming, will be found under $12 and $15. o Wine colors and the newer \ 7 blue or black Milans and straws, : with the caravel tilt—turbans, Pas sailors and tilting little “stove / —* pipes” hats of two materials eae and hats all ribbon Scores of fetching new styles—refined in design, ma- terial and finish—-well nigh incredible at the price SPECIAL FOR TOMORROW An assortment of Authoritative New Spring $5 Hats, Very Latest Mana lei 9) Specially planned for this occasion ~ productions which will be entirely acceptable to the most particular trade At the Fashion % New Shop f \ Nineteen West 34th Street A tnd ~ ~ cirenits whi wo did a sort of inner circle, “Suddenly le decided he had enough ! | and started for home, After him we We were getting | German Th A lucky shot found tts went head-first through the top of the | built of heavy logs and with The pilot » torn to pieces. Recaptured, an Harvey arrested two yotng As himself in the | vey" Alfred Brewer, 400 realy ‘Pond Witham | @ distant relative and | adver relative's | THREW HER CHILDREN FROM WINDOW TO SKOW ws BETTER TOBACGO, Mother, Frightened by Fire, Ju One Dead and Two ta From Acctdental Asphy Mike Roccosalles, his wife a boarde? named Rosario Alf into rooms in. the last night There w He-Hght phew, hearing no Te , climbed Into the apar nd his naclous, There was an open gas jot 1 ile Lily en Will give you better w ever wore. It’s in ther men to-day in tho store of Busan & Co, Fubber-makers, he} It |a better dress shield. Ni ‘time you need a pat r, fh to ask for “Taly.”” m defective shields. said the airman, “The Fokker and} xo) eficlary of Richard J. Wyckoff, | : | caught up with the Britisher and wae|the aged Hunterdon County farmer,| All shapes and sizes—at emptying its guns at fifty y who, with his house re | I] department and dry wound up our dive twenty y ’ {| eooda stores, tenement at No. 54 gas turned on, so the three went to bed This morning Joe Roccosalles and the DRESS. than any dress shield you 'ber—the way it’s made and cured by our expert impossible to make ss company turn: After Trio ai Wa Ph MORE SMOKES pile of snow this morning and Jumpe ‘This Selanne Cut P Vite knch mceattet ner senor! ‘Tobacco a Big Hit In suffered ins of the right) hip | WIGH QUALITY — BIG PACKAGE Jobin, left ip bruised) You cut plug smokers of New York craton. | get acquainted with the tobacco that Mrs. Murphy had| has ‘em all going—U. S. Marine! be gg OF saa Only a year ago U. S, Marine was « front. wind with a introduced in this city. It offered bet- @ nearby building and sma ter smokes and more smokes for the same money, It made a hit! permanent users In quality notch cut plug tobacco, Made of ff old Burley leaf aged 3 to 5 years, i that are supremely ped a ~there are more ou slow-burning smokes in the pa No. 1) cut plug package for a nickel you may be smoking now, to yourself to try U, S. ou owt Roe- teres pon tment uncle tion in every way. in_the' to-day—5 cents. —Advt. ear your baby wants, ub- ext be waterproof. Coming from the German front, and | Road, who was apparently trying to hige | need for YOUR baby? The everal hundred feet below him, he (it we, Maspeth car barns Webb made! §=We guarantee them | eames itceiven ven eee |saw one of the Fokkers, pursuing | the station Hr ied him as the 100% moisture-proof, and € it gives 3 , and rapidly overhauling a British bi- | PToner who h will pay any damage to aby will be worth many plane, fleeing back to the British | pa} times its cost. iene, Wyckoff Held for Marder, Owns or waists resulting pt St. partment stores. All Lily Rubber Goods are made with a skill of 85 laste experience as foremost rubber experts. We have |developed rubber-making processes to their greatest | Stages of perfection. Our goods show it—that is why ‘‘They Last Longer”’ You take chanees if you buy afy rubber goods whose makerr Their durability depends upon how they are ies you can’t actually see in the merchandise | you don’t know. made—ipon qna Look for the ‘‘ Lily’’ trademark on rubber goods of every nature—tt is your quarantee of dur ability. If tt’s marked ‘‘TAly’’ it’s safe to buy. | Brooklyn Shield & Rubber Co., Brooklyn, N.Y. Makers of All Lily Rubber Goods PEASE PIAN have be for PLAYE stand t responsive with a piano. send fo way en famous for their tone and quality rly seventy-five years. PEASE R-PIANOS are made in the su that Pi he test of time arc and durable. ¢ liberal allowance e hon- simple, terms Pease They nvenient has enabled made for youy old Used instruments at r catalog PEASE PIANO Co., 128 W. 42d St., near Broadway, 34 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn, 57 Halsey St., Newark, N. J. room. The woman and the tai I * taken to the Volunteer Hovpital, i critical condition. ‘The presu that the on ~ the | Thousands of cut plug smokers tried Marine and right away becdine S. Marine is the top- S. Marine has a unique flavor and fra tisfying. age of U. S. Marine than in any other No matter what cut plug tobacco cause it will give you greater satisfac: Get a big package of U. S. Marine BUNNY BABY PANTS “They Last Longer” | Here’s just the garment just the garment your baby needs. It will help you keep him sweet, comfortable and healthy. Fits snugly, looks neat, and is 100 per cent Isn’t it just-what you 25c, 50c, etc., up to $1.50, at all dry goods and‘ de- i